| Marco Jacquemet on Sat, 5 Mar 2016 00:21:14 +0100 (CET) |
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| Re: <nettime> Tagging Banksy: Using Geographic Profiling to |
It would be nice to have a link to a free download of this article.
Right now the only option is Francis and Taylor website, where they
charge USD 234.00 for issue! As you may know, there's an ongoing fight
(especially in Europe, see for instance https://sci-hub.io/ or
http://thecostofknowledge.com/) against this prostitution of
scholarship.
On Fri, Mar 4, 2016 at 5:02 AM, nettime's evil scientist <nettime@kein.org> wrote:
The pseudonymous artist Banksy is one of the UKâs most successful
contemporary artists, but his identity remains a mystery. Here, we use
a Dirichlet process mixture (DPM) model of geographic profiling, a
mathematical technique developed in criminology and finding increasing
application within ecology and epidemiology, to analyse the spatial
patterns of Banksy artworks in Bristol and London. The model takes as
input the locations of these artworks, and calculates the probability
of âoffenderâ residence across the study area. Our analysis highlights
areas associated with one prominent candidate (e.g., his home),
supporting his identification as Banksy. More broadly, these results
support previous suggestions that analysis of minor terrorism-related
acts (e.g., graffiti) could be used to help locate terrorist bases
before more serious incidents occur, and provides a fascinating
example of the application of the model to a complex, real-world
problem.
Hauge, Michelle V., Mark D. Stevenson, D. Kim Rossmo, and Steven C. Le
Comber. 2016. âTagging Banksy: Using Geographic Profiling to
Investigate a Modern Art Mystery.â Journal of Spatial Science, March,
1â6. doi:10.1080/14498596.2016.1138246.
<...>
--
Marco Jacquemet
Professor of Communication and Culture
University of San Francisco
tel: 415-422-5543
fax: 415-422-5680
mjacquemet@usfca.edu
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